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Mr Pendlebury has correctly predicted Nobel Prize winners since 2002 on the basis of their large number of citations and their responsibility for founding a new field of research likely to be recognised by the Nobel Committee.

Professor Higgs, emeritus professor of physics at the University of Edinburgh, was feted last year after the particle whose existence he predicted in the 1960s, known as the Higgs Boson, was confirmed during experiments at the Cern particle physics facility in Switzerland. However, the confirmation came too late for him to be considered for last year’s prize.

The first of this year’s Nobel Prizes will be announced on Monday. Each year, Mr Pendlebury makes three predictions for the Nobel Prizes in physiology or medicine, chemistry, physics and economics. He also considers predictions from previous years to remain valid.

Of the 28 researchers he has tipped this year - 17 are based at US institutions, while UK universities have four representatives.

As well as Professor Higgs, Mr Pendlebury’s predictions in the physics category include Didier Queloz, who holds joint professorships at the University of Cambridge and the University of Geneva. He is tipped to be recognised alongside University of California, Berkeley professor Geoffrey Marcy and emeritus Geneva professor Michel Mayor for their discoveries of planets beyond the solar system (extrasolar planets).